"Thus it is said that one who knows the enemy and knows himself will not be endangered in a hundred engagements."
Sun Tzu, The Art of War.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Sovereign Iraqi Government Depends on Rebuilding Strong Air Force

By David MaysSpecial to American Forces Press Service

Sept. 18, 2007 - Rebuilding Iraq's decimated air force is critical to securing the country's future, a U.S. military commander said yesterday in Kirkuk, Iraq. "No state or government is truly sovereign unless it can control and defend its own airspace," Air Force Lt. Col. Greg Zehner said during a conference call with online journalists and "bloggers."

As a senior advisor on the Coalition Air Force Transition Team, Zehner has trained Iraqi air force recruits at Kirkuk Regional Air Base in northern Iraq and helped craft a five-year plan for future expansion of the force.

"If you want to have an Iraq that is at peace with its neighbors, secure within its borders and a partner in the war on terror, you have to have an air force that's credible enough," Zehner said. "It's a pretty tall order, ... and it takes time."

Because of his thousands of hours as an aviator and his military education at the Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Zehner was seen as the perfect candidate to play a key role in the rebuilding of the Iraqi air force.

"Nobody knew what the Iraqi air force was," Zehner said. "And it's probably not much different now."

Zehner described the initial steps of resurrecting what was the world's sixth-largest air force when he took over a well-intentioned but "hodgepodge" mission at Kirkuk.

"I brought six other people with me," Zehner said, "and started the long crawl upwards."

In summer 2006, Zehner and his team traveled to Hurlburt Field in Florida, where Air Force special operations commandos condensed a rigorous nine-month training curriculum into a five-week crash course. He took lessons learned from that experience back to Iraq, where he was tasked with building a brand-new air force, initially using a single turboprop aircraft.

"You won't have a credible security force until that Iraqi air force is up and running," he said.

About 1,200 Iraqis currently serve in the country's air force, out of 2,900 authorized slots. The goal for 2008 is 6,000 Iraqi airmen, Zehner said.

"We will have to stand up some squadrons," he said. "But that's the Iraqis standing up squadrons and us working to help them on that way."

Iraqi pilots have conducted many crucial missions using their prop plane equipped with infrared video and other surveillance devices, the colonel said. They have tracked and helped capture suspected oil smugglers and they documented deadly violence during a recent demonstration.